Member
in sentence
4717 examples of Member in a sentence
But while that might work for, say, Hungary, it would be inconceivable for an EMU
member
like Italy.
The 12
member
countries of Africa’s International Conference on the Great Lakes Region have committed to similar mandatory due-diligence requirements.
Seven years ago, the President of the European Commission requested the European Group on Ethics in Science and New Technologies (of which I was a member) to examine the "ethical aspects of the labeling of foods derived from modern biotechnology."
The World Health Assembly, representing the World Health Organization’s 194
member
countries, has endorsed a shared vision – known as the Decade of Vaccines – of a world free from vaccine-preventable diseases, with the full benefits of immunization reaching all people, regardless of who they are or where they live.
I went as a World Health Organization staff
member.
Thus, when they saw and heard that doctors couldn't help, people brought their sick family
member
home.
The EU’s inefficiencies, coupled with changes in the international priorities of some of its
member
states, have led to a decline in the Union’s political clout.
Yet we will work with the Iraqi people in whatever way we can to encourage the emergence of a stable, constructive, and independent
member
of the Arab world.
Such depictions are breathtaking in their audacity, given Japan’s seven-decade record as a peaceful and constructive
member
of the international community.
Even Jaitley, now India’s finance minister and a prominent cabinet member, has not expressed any opposition.
So far, no
member
country of the Organization of American States has recognized the new government, several countries have withdrawn their ambassadors from Paraguay, and the Mercosur trading bloc has suspended Paraguay from trade negotiations.
The European Union’s Stability and Growth Pact (SGP) dictated that
member
countries must continue to meet these criteria.
UN
member
states should uphold this principle by sending a strong signal to Maduro’s government to end the current violence.
For example, harmonizing insolvency regimes across the continent and reducing tax incentives that favor debt over equity, while entirely logical, strike at the heart of
member
states' remaining sovereignty, and thus will be extremely difficult to push forward.
Europe cannot afford a dogfight between these two founding
member
states, so it’s high time to put emotions aside and review their differences on the future course of European integration.
Clearly, a system of one vote per
member
state would have meant domination by Europe’s smaller states.
The equilibrium in voting rights between small and large
member
states was also secured by vesting exclusive authority to propose regulation in the Commission, which expresses the common interests of the Community.
This authority was reinforced by requiring unanimity among
member
states to overrule the Commission – a provision that has strengthened the smaller states against the larger ones.
Belgium, though, was the one
member
state that supported the Dutch in this brave venture.
Traditionally, the Netherlands has thought of itself as the smallest of the EU’s large
member
states.
Like To Potami, a ten-month-old Greek political party of which I am a member, they advocate correcting policy errors that threaten the survival of the eurozone, in order to create a stronger EU.
For example, the court determined that the German parliament would have to be consulted each time a
member
country requested assistance, asserting that fiscal sovereignty forms the core of national sovereignty.
A glance at any EU
member
state’s parliamentary calendar shows that lawmaking there is largely confined to domestic issues.
Rather than tinkering, perhaps the EU should boldly create an American-style bicameral system by turning the parliament into a House of Representatives and electing a Senate to replace the Council of Ministers, with two senators per
member
state.
First, the Financial Stability Board should help to reduce avoidable inconsistencies across countries by propagating a set of high-level principles to which all
member
countries would be expected to conform when introducing new regulations.
Third, the European Union’s Macroeconomic Imbalances Procedure, established to prevent destabilizing economic policies by individual
member
states, requires countries with a current-account surplus above 6% of GDP to make adjustments.
The Secretary General has submitted a reasonable reform plan, but a majority of UN
member
states, acting together as the so-called G-77, are balking, because they regard it as another step in reducing the authority of the General Assembly relative to the Security Council.
Mnuchin has requested from the International Monetary Fund a “frank and candid analysis” of
member
countries’ exchange-rate policies, to determine whether China is deliberately keeping its currency undervalued.
Thus, its Self Defense Forces must continue fulfilling their duties of "humanitarian and restoration efforts," while cooperating with Japan's key ally, the US, as a
member
of an integrated multinational force under UN leadership.
Donald Payne, a leading
member
of the US House Foreign Affairs Committee, and Ana Gomes, a
member
of the European Parliament from Portugal and head of the EU’s observation team in the 2005 elections, have sought to tie non-humanitarian aid more closely to Ethiopia’s conduct on press freedom and other human rights.
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